speak
 
speak
 (spēk) verb
spoke (
spōk), spoken (spōʹkən), speaking, speaks
 
verb
, intransitive
1.
	To utter words or articulate sounds with ordinary speech modulation; talk. 
2.
	a. To convey thoughts, opinions, or emotions orally. b. To express oneself. c. To be on speaking terms: They are no longer speaking.
3.	To deliver an address or a lecture: The president of NOW was to speak at the rally. 
4.	a. To make a statement in writing: The biography speaks of great loneliness. b. To act as spokesperson: spoke for the entire staff.
5.	a. To convey a message by nonverbal means: Actions speak louder than words. b. To be expressive: spoke with her eyes. c. To be appealing: His poetry speaks to one's heart.
6.	To make a reservation or request. Often used with for: Is this dance spoken for? I spoke for the last slice of pizza. 
7.	a. To produce a characteristic sound: The drums spoke. b. To give off a sound on firing. Used of guns or cannon.
8.	To make communicative sounds. 
9.	To give an indication or a suggestion: His manners spoke of good upbringing. 
verb
, transitive
1.
	To articulate in a speaking voice: spoke words of wisdom. 
2.
	To converse in or be able to converse in (a language): speaks German. 
3.
	a. To express aloud; tell: speak the truth. b. To express in writing.
4.	Nautical. To hail and communicate with (another vessel) at sea. 
5.	To convey by nonverbal means: His eyes spoke volumes. 
 
phrasal verb.
speak out
To talk freely and fearlessly, as about a public issue. speak up
1.
	To speak loud enough to be audible. 
2.
	To speak without fear or hesitation. 
 
 
idiom.
so to speak
In a manner of speaking: can't see the forest for the trees, so to speak. 
speak down to
To speak condescendingly to: She never spoke down to her audience. 
to speak of
Worthy of mention: There's nothing new to speak of. 
 
[Middle English speken, from Old English sprecan, specan.]
 speak
ʹable adjective
Synonyms:
 speak, talk, converse, discourse. These verbs mean to express one's thoughts by uttering words. Speak and talk, often interchangeable, are the most general: He ate his meal without once speaking to his dinner companion. "Why don't you speak for yourself, John?" (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). "On an occasion of this kind it becomes more than a moral duty to speak one's mind. It becomes a pleasure" (Oscar Wilde). I want to talk with you about vacation plans. "We must know . . . what we are talking about" (Henry James). "Let's talk sense to the American people" (Adlai E. Stevenson). Converse stresses interchange of thoughts and ideas: "With thee conversing I forget all time" (John Milton). Discourse usually refers to formal, extended speech: "striding through the city, stick in hand, discoursing spontaneously on the writings of Hazlitt" (Manchester Guardian Weekly).